Keeper - Better Save Soul — Graveyard
It is not a standalone story (play Stranger Sins first for the best narrative experience), but as a mechanical and thematic expansion, it’s a worthy addition. After all, in a game where you sell human flesh to a tavern owner, ensuring a soul’s peaceful rest feels almost… ethical.
1. Introduction: The Soul of the Matter Graveyard Keeper , the irreverent medieval management sim from Lazy Bear Games, has never shied away from dark humor or existential dread. The 2021 DLC, Better Save Soul , dives headfirst into both. While previous expansions ( Stranger Sins and Game of Crone ) focused on the town’s past and refugee politics, Better Save Soul takes a metaphysical turn. It asks a question the base game only hinted at: What happens to the souls of the corpses you’ve been burying (and occasionally butchering)? Graveyard Keeper - Better Save Soul
”Heaven can wait. The demon can’t.” It is not a standalone story (play Stranger
You are introduced to a new location: the in the mountains behind the morgue. There, you meet the Soul of a Demon (voiced with perfect sardonic apathy), who offers a deal. He will give you a Soul Slicer —a bizarre device that extracts souls from corpses—if you help him process the backlog of lost souls. Your task: extract, cleanse, judge, and send souls to their appropriate afterlife (Heaven, Hell, or Purgatory). Introduction: The Soul of the Matter Graveyard Keeper
The answer, as expected in Graveyard Keeper , involves questionable ethics, soul-crushing bureaucracy, and a new, gleefully morbid crafting tree. The DLC activates after you’ve built the Stone Graveyard Fence . You are approached by a peculiar new character, Euridice , a self-proclaimed “Soul Healer” who reveals that your graveyard is leaking souls. Worse, these restless souls are failing their final judgment.
